Episodios

  • From Fig Picker to Fearless Prophet (Amos 1–2)
    Apr 17 2026

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    A Shakespeare line about “greatness thrust upon them” turns out to be the perfect doorway into Amos. He is not polished, powerful, or credentialed. He is a shepherd from Tekoa and a fig picker, yet God makes him fearless, clear, and impossible to ignore. We slow down to place Amos in biblical history under Jeroboam II around 760 BC, a prosperous era that masks deep moral decay in the northern kingdom of Israel.

    From there, the prophecy of judgment arrives fast. Amos starts with the surrounding nations so nobody can claim God is singling Israel out. Syria’s violence, Philistia’s slave trade, Tyre’s broken covenant of brotherhood, Edom’s hatred, Ammon’s atrocities, and Moab’s desecration all come under the same divine standard. Along the way we unpack the repeated phrase “for three transgressions and for four,” not as a number game, but as a warning that the evidence has piled up and refusal has consequences.

    Then Amos brings the message home: Judah rejects God’s law, and Israel’s sins stack up in a grim list of greed and oppression. People are treated as disposable, the poor are crushed, and comfort becomes a cover for injustice. We close by drawing the line from Amos’s warning to our own day, where delayed judgment can feel like safety until it suddenly is not. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us what part of Amos challenges you most.

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    12 m
  • Keeping Your Eyes on the Road Ahead (Joel 2:28–3:21)
    Apr 16 2026

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    The rearview mirror is tiny compared to the windshield, and that’s not an accident, it’s a metaphor for how we’re meant to live. We start with a story about choosing eyesight over memory, then take that wisdom straight into Scripture: God does not ask us to camp out in what we lost, what we regret, or what we can’t change. He keeps pulling our attention to what’s ahead, because Bible prophecy is designed to produce endurance and hope, not panic.

    We dig into the Book of Joel as it turns from immediate disaster to long-range promises about the latter days and the Day of the Lord. Joel 2 describes a future outpouring of the Spirit with dreams and visions, paired with unmistakable cosmic signs like the sun darkening and the moon turning blood red. We also clear up a major confusion point around Acts 2 and Pentecost: Peter is pointing to the Spirit’s arrival, not claiming the tribulation has begun or that every sign in Joel is already fulfilled. That context helps us avoid end times sensationalism and the modern habit of treating every “vision” claim as automatic proof of prophecy.

    From there we follow Joel 3 into Israel’s restoration, the gathering of nations for judgment in the valley of Jehoshaphat, and the final conflict Scripture connects with Armageddon. We trace the images that reappear in Revelation, including the harvest and winepress language that highlights the certainty of Christ’s victory. The episode ends where prophecy is meant to land: confidence that Jesus reigns, a coming millennial kingdom marked by renewal, and a practical call to stop living in the rearview mirror. If this strengthened your hope, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review. What part of Bible prophecy do you most want to understand next?

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    12 m
  • In Control of the Chaos (Joel 1:1–2:27)
    Apr 15 2026

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    A tsunami wipes out entire coastlines and the same question rises in every generation: if God is sovereign, why didn’t He stop it? We start there because real life starts there, with grief, shock, and the temptation to explain other people’s pain. Instead of reaching for quick answers, we follow the clearer path Scripture gives: don’t assume disasters are targeted payback, and don’t waste the warning that life is fragile.

    Then we open the book of Joel and watch a nation reel under a locust plague so severe it destroys fields, dries up wine, and leaves the land mourning. Joel doesn’t lead with weather patterns or theories. He calls priests and people to gather, to pray, and to return to the Lord. Along the way we unpack the meaning of the Day of the Lord, why Joel describes an invading army as the Lord’s army, and how repentance is meant to be inward and honest, not performative.

    The surprising turn is hope. Joel points to God’s mercy and His willingness to relent, and he holds out one of the most healing promises for anyone who feels devoured by loss: “I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten.” If you’re wrestling with suffering, judgment, repentance, or what it means to trust God without getting an explanation, you’ll find both clarity and comfort here. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review with the line that challenged you most.

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    12 m
  • Breaking the Heart of God (Hosea 11–14)
    Apr 14 2026

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    God’s heart “recoils” at the thought of judgment and that single word changes how we read Hosea. We walk through Hosea 11 and hear the Lord describe his love for Israel like a father teaching a child to walk, lifting them by the arms, bending down to feed them, and still being met with a turned back and a deaf ear. If you’ve ever assumed the Old Testament is only wrath, this message challenges that shortcut with the actual language of compassion, grief, and stubborn human refusal.

    From there, the prophecy turns sober. Idolatry makes punishment inevitable, and Hosea names Assyria as the coming king. We also look ahead to Hosea 12, where the indictment reaches Judah too, and Jacob becomes the living illustration: a deceiver who weeps, seeks God, and finds blessing. That story becomes the call for every listener who has drifted, hidden behind excuses, or mistaken comfort and success for moral innocence.

    Hosea 13 does not flinch at the terror of judgment, but Hosea 14 opens a clear path home: bring words, confess sin, and ask God to take away iniquity. The promise is stunningly simple and hope-filled: “I will heal their apostasy; I will love them freely.” We close with Hosea’s final line on wisdom, walking uprightly, and avoiding the frustration sin brings. If this encouraged you, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find this Bible teaching on Hosea, repentance, forgiveness, and God’s compassion.

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    12 m
  • Reliving the Good Old Days (Hosea 4–10)
    Apr 13 2026

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    The older we get, the easier it is to romanticize the past and call it “the good old days.” But what if the real story is that the calendar changes and the human heart doesn’t? We open with a simple memory of farm life and childhood lunches, then pivot to a hard truth from Hosea: sin is not a modern invention, and spiritual drift has been pulling on people for centuries.

    We walk through Hosea’s blunt case against Israel: no faithfulness, no steadfast love, and no real knowledge of God. The prophet’s language is vivid and unsettling, from “the land mourns” under judgment to the absurd picture of people asking a piece of wood for guidance. We talk about idolatry as spiritual adultery, why leaders who won’t teach truth leave a vacuum, and how a stubborn love for sin can make returning to God feel impossible.

    Then we follow Hosea into the consequences, including the warning that Assyria is coming like a circling vulture and the timeless principle that those who “sow the wind” eventually “reap the whirlwind.” The episode lands on a personal question with major spiritual stakes: do you merely know about God, or do you actually know Him? If this challenged you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

    NEW: Legacies of Light for Children, Volume 1:

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    12 m
  • The Faithless Wife (Hosea 1–3)
    Apr 10 2026

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    God commands Hosea to do something that feels impossible: love faithfully inside a marriage marked by betrayal. That single command turns into one of the clearest portraits in the Old Testament of covenant love, spiritual adultery, and the kind of mercy that refuses to let go. We start our wisdom journey through the Minor Prophets by showing why “minor” describes their brevity, not their impact, then we step into the northern kingdom of Israel during Jeroboam II’s reign, where comfort and prosperity mask a deep rot of idolatry.

    We walk through Hosea’s family as a living sermon. Gomer’s unfaithfulness becomes a mirror of Israel’s pursuit of other gods, and their children’s names become prophetic warnings you can’t ignore: Jezreel, Lo-Ruhamah, and Lo-Ammi. We unpack what each name signals about accountability, looming judgment, and the loss of God’s protective blessing, while also clarifying that God’s unconditional covenant promises are not canceled even when a generation rejects Him.

    Then the tone shifts. God moves from condemnation to a tender invitation, promising a future restored relationship marked by righteousness, steadfast love, mercy, and faithfulness. Finally, Hosea is told to go get Gomer back, even paying to redeem her, and we connect that image to the gospel: Christ purchases us out of slavery to sin and remains a faithful Groom to an often-faithless bride. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway from Hosea’s story.

    NEW: Legacies of Light for Children, Volume 1:

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    12 m
  • Human History in the Hand of Divine Authority (Daniel 11–12)
    Apr 9 2026

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    A prophecy written centuries before the headlines it predicts sounds impossible until you actually read Daniel 11. We follow the final stretch of Daniel and watch the text lay out a chain of rulers and empires with striking clarity, the kind of specificity that makes critics argue it had to be written later. We take the opposite conclusion: God isn’t guessing, He’s revealing, because human history is in His hands.

    We start with the sweep from Persia to Greece, including Xerxes and the rise of Alexander the Great, then the fracturing of his kingdom into rival powers that battle for control while Israel sits trapped between them. From there we zoom in on Antiochus Epiphanes, a historical persecutor whose actions fit Daniel’s descriptions, including the abomination of desolation and the profaning of the temple. If you’ve ever searched for “Daniel 11 explained,” “Antiochus Epiphanes,” or “abomination that makes desolate,” this walkthrough ties the biblical text to the historical record in plain language.

    Then the prophecy pivots from near-term fulfillment to end times prophecy: Antiochus becomes a foreshadowing of the Antichrist, the beast described in Revelation. Daniel 12 pushes to the Great Tribulation, the role of Michael, the deliverance of Israel’s believing remnant, and the sealed timeline of “time, times, and half a time.” We end with the final outcome revealed in Revelation: the return of Jesus Christ, the defeat of the Antichrist, and the beginning of Christ’s kingdom on earth, followed by the sobering question of where we stand when the King is crowned.

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    NEW: Legacies of Light for Children, Volume 1:

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    12 m
  • Seventy Weeks of Human History (Daniel 9–10)
    Apr 8 2026

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    Daniel opens a scroll, does the math, and realizes a national deadline is near, yet his first move is not celebration but confession. We walk through Daniel’s discovery in Jeremiah that the seventy-year Babylonian exile is almost complete, then trace how his prayer for Jerusalem becomes the doorway to one of the Bible’s most debated and most hopeful prophetic passages. If you’ve ever wondered how prayer, repentance, and God’s reputation fit together, Daniel 9 gives a clear and challenging picture.

    Then Gabriel arrives with “insight and understanding,” expanding the horizon from seventy years to the seventy weeks of Daniel, a 490-year framework that connects the decree to rebuild Jerusalem, the rebuilding days of Nehemiah, and the coming of the Anointed One. We unpack why “weeks” means units of sevens, how the first sixty-nine weeks lead to the Messiah being “cut off,” and why that phrase has fueled centuries of conversation about Messianic prophecy and the crucifixion.

    Finally, we explore the still-future seventieth week: a seven-year period tied to the tribulation, a broken covenant, and the figure Scripture calls the Antichrist, alongside Daniel 10’s glimpse of spiritual warfare where delays happen but God’s program never derails. You’ll leave with a steadier confidence that God’s timeline runs to the latter days, includes the nations, and still reaches the details of your life. Subscribe for the next journey, share this with a friend who loves biblical prophecy, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.

    NEW: Legacies of Light for Children, Volume 1:

    Children Need Heroes. This book tells the story of nine Christian heroes worth following. https://www.wisdomonline.org/store/view/legacies-of-light-kids-1

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    13 m